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n the sheet-iron walls. On the main floor the building had two large rooms across the centre, one on the front and one on the rear. At each side were four small rooms. The large front-room was used as a dining-room and had two broad tables of planed palm trunks. The side-rooms were bedrooms, generally speaking, though most of the time I was there some were used for stabling the pigs and goats, which had to be taken in owing to the rainy season. It is a simple matter to keep a hotel on the upper Amazon. Each room in the _Hotel de Augusto_ was neatly and chastely furnished with a pair of iron hooks from which to hang the hammock, an article one had to provide himself. There was nothing in the room besides the hooks. No complete privacy was possible because the corrugated sheet-iron partitions forming the walls did not extend to the roof. The floors were sections of palm trees, with the flat side down, making a succession of ridges with open spaces of about an inch between, through which the ground or the water, according to the season, was visible. The meals were of the usual monotonous fare typical of the region. Food is imported at an enormous cost to this remote place, since there is absolutely no local agriculture. Even sugar and rice, for instance, which are among the important products of Brazil, can be had in New York for about one-tenth of what the natives pay for them in Remate de Males. A can of condensed milk, made to sell in America for eight or nine cents, brings sixty cents on the upper Amazon, and preserved butter costs $1.20 a pound. The following prices which I have had to pay during the wet season in this town will, doubtless, be of interest: One box of sardines $ 1.20 One pound of unrefined sugar .30 One roll of tobacco (16 pounds) 21.30 One basket of farinha retails in Para for $4.50 13.30 One bottle of ginger ale .60 One pound of potatoes .60 Calico with stamped pattern, pr. yd. .90 One Collins machete, N.Y. price, $1.00 12.00 One pair of men's shoes 11.00 One bottle of very plain port wine, 22,000 reis or 7.30 Under such circumstances, of course, the food supply is very poor. Except for a few dried cereals and staples, nothing is used but canned goods; the i
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